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Historic,  Archive  Document 

Do  not  assume  content  reflects  current 
scientific  knowledge,  policies,  or  practices. 


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FILECOPY  Jy/ 

Economic  Analysis  ' ** 
F&V,  AMS 

A SHORT  HISTORY 
OF  AGRICULTURAL 
ADJUSTMENT,  1933-75 

Wayne  D.  Rasmussen,  Gladys  L.  Baker,  and  James  S.  Ward 


ECONOMIC  RESEARCH  SERVICE 
UNITED  STATES  DEPARTMENT  OF  AGRICULTURE 


AGRICULTURE  INFORMATION  BULLETIN  NO.  391 


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A SHORT  HISTORY  OF  AGRICULTURAL  ADJUSTMENT,  1933-75.  By  Wayne  D.  Rasmussen, 
Gladys  L.  Baker,  and  James  S.  Ward.  National  Economic  Analysis  Division. 
Economic  Research  Service.  U.S.  Department  of  Agriculture.  Agriculture 
Information  Bulletin  No.  391. 


ABSTRACT 


Many  programs  of  the  U.S.  Department  of  Agriculture,  particularly  those 
concerned  with  supporting  the  prices  of  farm  products  and  encouraging  farmers 
to  adjust  production  to  demand,  were  initiated  by  interrelated  laws  passed  by 
the  Congress  from  1933  to  1975.  This  report  attempts  to  provide  an  overall 
view,  showing  how  Congress  modified  legislation  to  meet  changing  economic 
situations,  and  giving  a historical  background  on  program  development.  It 
should  serve  as  background  for  persons  concerned  with  analyzing  present  farm 
programs. 

Key  Words:  Agricultural  adjustment,  price  support,  legislation,  agricultural 
policy. 


CONTENTS 

Page 


Origin  of  Adjustment  Programs 1 

The  Agricultural  Adjustment  Act  of  1933 2 

The  Soil  Conservation  and  Domestic  Allotment  Act  of  1936 4 

The  Agricultural  Marketing  Agreement  Act  of  1937 5 

The  Agricultural  Adjustment  Act  of  1938  6 

Wartime  Measures 8 

Post-War  Price  Supports 10 

The  Korean  War 12 

Levels  of  Price  Support — Fixed  or  Flexible? 12 

The  Soil  Bank 13 

Farm  Programs  in  the  1960's 14 

The  Food  and  Agriculture  Act  of  1965 16 

The  Agricultural  Act  of  1970 17 

The  Agriculture  and  Consumer  Protection  Act  of  1973 19 


Washington,  D.C.  20250 


March  1976 


ii 


i 


A SHORT  HISTORY  OF  AGRICULTURAL  ADJUSTMENT,  1933-75 

BY 

WAYNE  D.  RASMUSSEN,  GLADYS  L.  BAKER,  and  JAMES  S.  WARD  1/ 


ORIGIN  OF  ADJUSTMENT  PROGRAMS 

Many  programs  of  the  U.S.  Department  of  Agriculture,  particularly  those 
concerned  with  supporting  the  prices  of  farm  products  and  encouraging  farmers 
to  adjust  production  to  demand,  are  the  result  of  a series  of  interrelated  laws 
passed  by  Congress  from  1933  to  1975.  This  review  attempts  to  provide  an  over- 
all view  of  this  legislation  and  programs,  showing  how  Congress  has  modified 
the  legislation  to  meet  changing  economic  situations,  and  giving  a historical 
background  on  program  development.  It  should  serve  as  background  for  econo- 
mists and  others  concerned  with  analyzing  present  farm  programs. 

The  unprecedented  economic  crisis  which  paralyzed  the  Nation  by  1933 
struck  first  and  hardest  at  the  farm  sector  of  the  economy.  For  agriculture 
and  rural  America,  it  was  the  worst  economic-social-political  wrenching  in 
history.  Farmers  were  forced  to  the  wall.  Foreclosures  were  the  order  of  the 
day.  Realized  net  income  of  farm  operators  in  1932  was  less  than  one- third  of 
what  it  had  been  in  1929.  Farm  prices  fell  more  than  50  percent,  while  prices 
of  goods  and  services  farmers  had  to  buy  declined  32  percent.  With  the 
United  States  moving  from  a debtor  to  a creditor  nation  after  World  War  I,  and 
continued  loss  in  the  volume  and  price  of  exports,  the  relative  decline  in  the 
farmers’  position  had  begun  in  the  summer  of  1920.  Thus,  for  a decade  farmers 
were  caught  in  a serious  squeeze  between  the  prices  they  received  and  the 
prices  they  had  to  pay  before  the  situation  became  critical  and  a major  element 
of  the  Depression. 

Farm  journals  and  farm  organizations  had,  since  the  1920's,  been  advising 
farmers  to  control  production  on  a voluntary  basis — that  ready  markets  and 
fair  prices  were  shrinking  or  no  longer  available.  Attempts  were  made  in  some 
areas  to  organize  crop  withholding  movements  on  the  theory  that  speculative 
manipulation  was  the  cause  of  price  declines.  When  these  attempts  proved  un- 
successful, farmers  turned  to  the  more  formal  organization  of  cooperative 
marketing  associations  as  a remedy. 

The  Agricultural  Marketing  Act  of  1929,  establishing  the  Federal  Farm 
Board,  had  been  enacted  on  the  theory  that  cooperative  marketing  organizations 
aided  by  the  Federal  Government  could  provide  a solution  to  the  problem  of  low 
farm  prices.  To  supplement  this  method  the  Board  was  also  given  authority  to 
make  loans  to  cooperative  associations  to  make  advances  to  members  and  to  make 
loans  to  stabilization  corporations  for  the  purpose  of  controlling  any  surplus 
through  purchase  operations. 


_1/  Rasmussen  and  Baker  are  historians  with  the  Economic  Research  Service, 
U.S.  Department  of  Agriculture,  and  Ward  is  Assistant  to  the  Director  of  Infor- 
mation, Agricultural  Stabilization  and  Conservation  Service,  U.S.  Department  of 
Agriculture. 


By  June  30,  1932,  the  Federal  Farm  Board  stated  that  its  efforts  to  stem 
the  disastrous  decline  in  farm  prices  had  failed.  In  a special  report  to 
Congress  in  December  1932,  the  Board  recommended  legislation  which  would 
"provide  an  effective  system  for  regulating  acreage  or  quantities  sold,  or 
both."  The  Board's  recommendation  on  control  of  acreage  or  marketing  was  a 
step  toward  the  development  of  a production  control  program. 

Following  the  election  of  President  Franklin  D.  Roosevelt,  who  had 
committed  himself  to  direct  Government  action  to  solve  the  farm  crisis,  control 
of  agricultural  production  became  the  primary  tool  for  raising  the  prices  and 
incomes  of  farmpeople. 


THE  AGRICULTURAL  ADJUSTMENT  ACT  OF  1933 

The  Agricultural  Adjustment  Act  was  approved  on  May  12,  1933.  Its  goal  of 
restoring  farm  purchasing  power  of  agricultural  commodities  or  the  fair  exchange 
value  of  a commodity  based  upon  price  relative  to  the  prewar  1909-14  level  was 
to  be  accomplished  through  the  use,  by  the  Secretary  of  Agriculture,  of  a 
number  of  methods.  These  included  the  authorization  (1)  to  secure  voluntary 
reduction  of  the  acreage  in  basic  crops  through  agreements  with  producers  and 
use  of  direct  payments  for  participation  in  acreage  control  programs;  (2)  to 
regulate  marketing  through  voluntary  agreements  with  processors,  associations 
of  producers,  and  other  handlers  of  agricultural  commodities  or  products;  (3) 
to  license  processors,  associations  of  producers,  and  others  handling  agricul- 
tural commodities  to  eliminate  unfair  practices  or  charges;  (4)  to  determine 
the  necessity  for  and  the  rate  of  processing  taxes;  and  (5)  to  use  the  pro- 
ceeds of  taxes  and  appropriate  funds  for  the  cost  of  adjustment  operations,  for 
the  expansion  of  markets,  and  for  the  removal  of  agricultural  surpluses. 

Congress  declared  its  intent,  at  the  same  time,  to  protect  the  consumers' 
interest.  This  was  to  be  done  by  readjusting  farm  production  at  a level  that 
would  not  increase  the  percentage  of  consumers'  retail  expenditures  above  the 
percentage  returned  to  the  farmer  in  the  prewar  base  period. 

Wheat,  cotton,  field  corn,  hogs,  rice,  tobacco,  and  milk  and  its  products 
were  designated  as  basic  commodities  in  the  original  legislation.  Subsequent 
amendments  in  1934  and  1935  expanded  the  list  of  basic  commodities  to  include 
the  following:  rye,  flax,  barley,  grain  sorghums,  cattle,  peanuts,  sugarbeets, 
sugarcane,  and  potatoes.  However,  acreage  allotment  programs  were  only  in 
operation  for  cotton,  field  corn,  peanuts,  rice,  sugar,  most  kinds  of  tobacco, 
and  wheat . 

The  acreage  reduction  programs,  with  their  goal  of  raising  farm  prices 
toward  parity  (the  relationship  between  farm  prices  and  costs  which  prevailed 
in  1909-14) , could  not  become  effective  until  after  the  1933  crops  were  ready 
for  market.  As  an  emergency  measure  during  1933,  programs  for  plowing  under 
portions  of  planted  cotton  and  tobacco  crops  were  undertaken.  The  serious 
financial  condition  of  cotton  and  corn-hog  producers  led  to  demands  in  the  fall 
of  1933  for  price  fixing  at  or  near  parity  levels.  The  Government  responded 
with  nonrecourse  loans  (the  commodity  itself  was  security  on  the  loan)  for 
cotton  and  corn.  The  loans  were  initiated  as  temporary  measures  to  give 


-2- 


farmers  in  advance  some  of  the  benefits  to  be  derived  from  controlled  produc- 
tion, to  relieve  market  glut  at  harvest  time  and  to  stimulate  farm  purchasing 
power  as  a part  of  the  overall  recovery  program.  The  level  of  the  first  cotton 
loan,  in  1933,  at  10  cents  a pound,  was  at  approximately  69  percent  of  parity. 
The  level  of  the  first  corn  loan,  at  45  cents  per  bushel,  was  at  approximately 
60  percent  of  parity.  The  loans  were  made  possible  by  the  establishment  of  the 
Commodity  Credit  Corporation  (CCC)  on  October  17,  1933,  by  Executive  Order  6340 
The  funds  for  its  capital  stock,  subscribed  by  the  Secretary  of  Agriculture  and 
the  Governor  of  the  Farm  Credit  Administration,  were  secured  from  an  allocation 
of  presidential  funds  authorized  by  the  National  Industrial  Recovery  Act  and 
the  Fourth  Deficiency  Appropriation  Act. 

The  Bankhead  Cotton  Control  Act  of  April  21,  1934,  and  the  Kerr-Smith 
Tobacco  Control  Act  of  June  28,  1934,  introduced  a system  of  marketing  quotas 
by  allotting  to  producers  quotas  of  tax-exemption  certificates  and  tax-payments 
warrants  which  could  be  used  to  pay  sales  taxes  imposed  by  these  Acts.  This 
was  equivalent  to  allotting  producers  the  quantities  they  could  market  without 
being  taxed.  These  laws  were  designed  to  prevent  growers  who  did  not  partici- 
pate in  the  acreage  reduction  program  from  sharing  in  its  financial  benefits. 
These  measures  introduced  the  mandatory  use  of  referendums  by  requiring  that 
two-thirds  of  the  producers  of  cotton,  or  growers  controlling  three-fourths  of 
the  acreage  of  tobacco,  had  to  vote  for  a continuation  of  each  program  if  it 
was  to  be  in  effect  after  the  first  year  of  operation. 

Surplus  disposal  programs  of  the  Department  of  Agriculture  were  initiated 
as  an  emergency  supplement  to  the  crop  control  programs.  The  Federal  Surplus 
Relief  Corporation,  later  named  the  Federal  Surplus  Commodities  Corporation, 
was  established  on  October  4,  1933,  as  an  operating  agency  for  carrying  out 
cooperative  food  purchase  and  distribution  projects  of  the  Department  and  the 
Federal  Emergency  Relief  Administration.  Processing  tax  funds  were  used  to 
process  heavy  pigs  and  sows  slaughtered  during  the  emergency  purchase  program, 
which  was  part  of  the  corn-hog  reduction  campaign  begun  during  November  1933. 
The  pork  products  were  distributed  to  unemployed  families.  During  1934  and 
early  1935,  meat  from  animals  purchased  with  special  drought  funds  was  also 
turned  over  for  relief  distribution.  Other  food  products  purchased  for  surplus 
removal  and  distribution  in  relief  channels  included  butter,  cheese,  and  flour. 
Section  32  of  the  amendments  of  August  24,  1935,  to  the  Agricultural  Adjustment 
Act  set  aside  30  percent  of  the  customs  receipts  for  the  removal  of  surplus 
farm  products  or  the  purchase  of  commodities  and  products,  to  encourage  exports 
and  to  make  payments  as  necessary  in  connection  with  normal  production  to  re- 
establish farmers'  purchasing  power. 

Production  control  programs  were  supplemented  by  marketing  agreement  pro- 
grams for  a number  of  fruits  and  vegetables  and  for  some  other  nonbasic  com- 
modities. The  first  such  agreement,  covering  the  handling  of  fluid  milk  in  the 
Chicago  market,  became  effective  August  1,  1933.  Marketing  agreements  raised 
producer  prices  by  controlling  the  timing  and  the  volume  of  the  commodity 
marketed.  Marketing  agreements  were  in  effect  for  a number  of  fluid  milk  areas 
They  were  also  in  operation  for  a short  period  for  the  basic  commodities  of 
tobacco  and  rice,  and  for  peanuts  before  their  designation  as  a basic  commodity 


-3- 


The  Act  of  August  24,  1935,  amended  the  Agricultural  Adjustment  Act  to 
authorize  the  substitution  of  orders  issued  by  the  Secretaty  of  Agriculture, 
with  or  without  marketing  agreements,  for  agreements  and  licenses. 

An  amendment  in  the  1935  Act,  Section  22,  also  authorized  the  President  to 
impose  import  quotas  under  prescribed  conditions.  Section  22,  as  amended, 
directs  the  Secretary  of  Agriculture  to  advise  the  President  whenever  he  has 
reason  to  believe  that  any  article  or  articles  being  imported  under  conditions 
and  in  quantities  would:  (1)  render  or  tend  to  render  ineffective  or  materi- 
ally interfere  with  any  price  support  or  other  program,  relating  to  commodi- 
ties, undertaken  by  USDA,  or  (2)  reduce  substantially  the  amount  of  any  product 
processed  in  the  United  States  from  any  commodity  or  product  for  which  a 
program  is  being  undertaken. 

If  the  President  agrees  with  the  Secretary  that  action  is  needed,  he 
directs  the  U.S.  International  Trade  Commission  to  conduct  an  investigation 
and  report  back  its  findings.  Based  on  these  findings,  the  President  is 
authorized  to  impose  fees  or  quotas  lie  determines  necessary. 

Whenever  the  Secretary  reports  to  the  President  that  a condition  exists 
requiring  emergency  treatment,  the  President  may  take  action  under  Section  22 
without  awaiting  the  report  of  the  Commission.  This  continues  in  effect  until 
the  President  takes  further  action  after  receipt  of  the  report  and  recommenda- 
tions of  the  Commission. 

No  trade  agreement  or  other  international  agreement  entered  into  at  any 
time  by  the  United  States  may  be  applied  in  a manner  inconsistent  with  the 
requirements  of  Section  22. 

The  Agricultural  Adjustment  Program  was  brought  to  an  abrupt  halt  on 
January  6,  1936,  by  the  Hoosac  Mills  decision  of  the  Supreme  Court,  which 
invalidated  the  production  control  provisions  of  the  Agricultural  Adjustment 
Act  of  May  12,  1933,  that  were  carried  out  through  contracts  between  the 
Federal  Government  and  individual  farmers,  and  financed  by  processing  taxes. 

Farmers  had  enjoyed  a striking  increase  in  farm  income  during  the  period 
the  Agricultural  Adjustment  Act  had  been  in  effect.  Farm  income  in  1935  was 
more  than  50  percent  higher  than  farm  income  during  1932,  due  in  part  to  the 
farm  programs.  Rental  and  benefit  payments  contributed  about  25  percent  of 
the  amount  by  which  the  average  cash  farm  income  in  1933-35  exceeded  the 
average  cash  farm  income  in  1932. 


THE  SOIL  CONSERVATION  AND  DOMESTIC 
ALLOTMENT  ACT  OF  1936 

The  Supreme  Court’s  ruling  against  the  production  control  provisions  of  the 
Agricultural  Adjustment  Act  presented  the  Congress  and  the  Department  with  the 
problem  of  finding  a new  approach  before  the  spring  planting  season.  Probable 
overplanting,  overproduction,  and  depressed  prices  were  facts  that  had  to  be 
faced.  Department  officials  and  spokesmen  for  farmers  recommended  to  Congress 
that  farmers  be  paid  for  voluntarily  shifting  acreage  from  soil-depleting 


-4- 


surplus  crops  into  soil-conserving  legumes  and  grasses.  The  Soil  Conserva- 
tion and  Domestic  Allotment  Act  was  approved  on  February  29,  1936.  The  Act 
combined  the  objective  of  promoting  soil  conservation  and  profitable  use  of 
agricultural  resources  with  that  of  reestablishing  and  maintaining  farm  income 
at  fair  levels.  The  goal  of  income  parity,  as  distinguished  from  price  parity, 
was  introduced  into  legislation  for  the  first  time.  It  was  defined  as  the 
ratio  of  purchasing  power  of  the  net  income  per  person  on  farms  to  that  of  the 
income  per  person  not  on  farms  which  prevailed  during  August  1909-July  1914. 

President  Roosevelt  stated  as  a third  major  objective  "the  protection  of 
consumers  by  assuring  adequate  supplies  of  food  and  fiber."  Under  a program 
launched  on  March  20,  1936,  farmers  were  offered  soil-conserving  payments  for 
shifting  acreage  from  soil-depleting  crops  to  soil-conserving  crops.  Soil- 
building payments  for  seeding  soil-building  crops  on  cropland  and  for  carrying 
out  approved  soil-building  practices  on  cropland  or  pasture  were  also  offered. 

Curtailment  in  crop  production  due  to  a severe  drought  in  1936  tended  to 
obscure  the  fact  that  planted  acreage  of  the  crops  which  had  been  classified 
as  basic  increased  despite  the  soil  conservation  program.  The  recurrence  of 
normal  weather,  crop  surpluses,  and  declining  farm  prices  in  1937  focused 
attention  on  the  failure  of  the  conservation  program  to  bring  about  crop 
reduction  as  a byproduct  of  better  land  utilization. 

The  supply  and  price  situation  was  particularly  serious  for  cotton.  With 
a large  crop  and  prospects  for  a world  carryover  of  all  cotton  of  17  or 
18  million  bales,  about  the  same  as  the  record  carryover  of  1932,  and  with 
prices  for  cotton  falling  sharply,  producers  felt  threatened  with  another 
serious  depression.  Demands  were  made  for  loans  and  price  adjustment  payments. 
Congress  responded  on  August  24,  1937,  by  making  $130  million  available  for 
cotton  price  adjustment  payments  to  producers  who  would  agree  to  abide  by  the 
1938  program.  The  program  provided  for  payments  of  the  difference  between 
12  cents  a pound  and  the  average  price  on  the  day  of  sale  but  not  to  exceed 
3 cents  a pound.  Because  of  limited  funds,  payments  were  made  on  65  percent 
of  each  producer's  1937  base. 

THE  AGRICULTURAL  MARKETING  AGREEMENT  ACT  OF  1937 

After  the  Supreme  Court's  action  in  1936,  Congress  enacted  legislation  in 
1937  to  clarify  the  legal  status  of  marketing  agreements  and  orders,  first 
authorized  by  the  Agricultural  Adjustment  Act  of  1933. 

Marketing  agreements  and  orders  were  originally  set  up  differently  for 
two  general  types  of  commodities — milk  and  other  commodities — because  of  the 
great  difference  in  marketing  problems  of  the  industries. 

In  the  case  of  milk,  regulations  involve  (1)  classification  according  to 
use,  and  (2)  fixing  the  minimum  prices  handlers  must  pay  to  producers  for  the 
various  uses.  Prices  of  milk  for  fluid  distribution  are  set  at  a higher  level 
than  prices  for  other  uses. 


-5- 


Regulations  for  other  commodities  (primarily  fruits,  vegetables,  and  tree 
nuts)  approach  the  problem  of  producers'"  prices  indirectly.  Quantity,  quality, 
and  rate  of  shipment  to  market  may  be  controlled,  and  prices  received  by  pro- 
ducers are  indirectly  affected. 


THE  AGRICULTURAL  ADJUSTMENT  ACT  OF  1938 

Department  officials  and  spokesmen  for  farm  organizations  began  working  on 
plans  for  new  legislation  to  supplement  the  Soil  Conservation  and  Domestic 
Allotment  Act.  The  Agricultural  Adjustment  Act  of  1938,  approved  February  16, 
1938,  combined  the  conservation  program  of  the  1936  legislation  with  new 
features  designed  to  meet  drought  emergencies  as  well  as  price  and  income 
crises  resulting  from  surplus  production.  In  this  Act  (Title  III) , the 
Congress  enacted  the  first  comprehensive  legislation  dealing  with  price 
support.  Marketing  control  was  substituted  for  direct  production  control,  and 
authority  was  based  on  Congressional  power  to  regulate  interstate  and  foreign 
commerce. 

The  new  features  of  the  legislation  included  mandatory  nonrecourse  loans 
for  cooperating  producers  of  corn,  wheat,  and  cotton  under  certain  supply  and 
price  conditions — if  marketing  quotas  had  not  been  rejected — and  loans  at  the 
option  of  the  Secretary  of  Agriculture  for  producers  of  other  commodities; 
marketing  quotas  to  be  proclaimed  for  corn,  cotton,  rice,  tobacco,  and  wheat 
when  supplies  reached  certain  levels;  referendums  to  determine  whether  the 
marketing  quotas  proclaimed  by  the  Secretary  should  be  put  into  effect;  crop 
insurance  for  wheat;  and  parity  payments,  if  funds  were  appropriated,  to 
producers  of  corn,  cotton,  rice,  tobacco,  and  wheat  in  amounts  which  would  pro- 
vide a return  as  nearly  equal  to  parity  as  the  available  funds  would  permit. 
These  payments  were  to  supplement  and  not  replace  other  payments.  In  addition 
to  payments  authorized  under  the  continued  Soil  Conservation  and  Domestic 
Allotment  Act  for  farmers  in  all  areas,  special  payments  were  made  in  10  States 
to  farmers  who  cooperated  in  a program  to  retire  land  unsuitable  for  cultiva- 
tion. This  was  part  of  a restoration  land  program  initiated  in  1938.  The 
attainment,  insofar  as  practicable,  of  parity  prices  and  parity  income  was 
stated  as  a goal  of  the  legislation.  Another  goal  was  the  protection  of  con- 
sumers by  the  maintenance  of  adequate  reserves  of  food,  feed,  and  fiber. 
Systematic  storage  of  supplies  made  possible  by  nonrecourse  loans  was  the  basis 
for  the  Department's  Ever-Normal  Granary  plan. 

Department  officials  moved  quickly  to  activate  the  new  legislation  to 
avert  another  depression  which  was  threatening  to  engulf  agriculture  and  other 
economic  sectors  in  the  Nation.  Acreage  allotments  were  in  effect  for  corn  and 
cotton  harvested  in  1938.  The  legislation  was  too  late  for  acreage  allotments 
to  be  effective  for  wheat  harvested  in  1938,  because  most  of  this  wheat  (winter) 
had  been  seeded  in  the  fall  of  1937.  Wheat  allotments  were  used  only  for 
calculating  benefit  payments.  Marketing  quotas  were  in  effect  during  1938  for 
cotton  and  for  flue-cured,  burley,  and  dark  tobaccos.  Marketing  quotas  could 
not  be  applied  to  wheat  since  the  Act  prohibited  their  use  during  the  1938/39 
marketing  year,  unless  funds  for  parity  payments  had  been  appropriated  prior  to 
May  15,  1938.  Supplies  of  corn  were  under  the  level  which  required  proclamation 
of  marketing  quotas. 


-6- 


On  cotton  and  wheat  loans,  the  Secretary  had  discretion  in  determining  the 
rate  at  a level  between  52  and  75  percent  of  parity.  A loan  program  was 
mandatory  for  these  crops  if  prices  fell  below  52  percent  of  parity  at  the  end 
of  the  crop  year,  or  if  production  was  in  excess  of  a normal  year’s  domestic 
consumption  and  exports.  A more  complex  formula  regulated  corn  loans,  with  the 
rate  graduated  in  relation  to  the  expected  supply,  and  with  75  percent  of 
parity  loans  available  when  production  was  at  or  below  normal  as  defined  in  the 
Act . 


Loans  for  commodities  other  than  corn,  cotton,  and  wheat  were  authorized, 
but  their  use  was  left  to  the  Secretary’s  discretion.  "Permissive"  commodities 
supported  during  the  1938-40  period  included  butter,  dates,  figs,  hops, 
turpentine,  rosin,  pecans,  prunes,  raisins,  barley,  rye,  grain  sorghums,  wool, 
winter  cover  crop  seeds,  mohair,  peanuts,  and  tobacco. 

Parity  payments  were  made  to  the  producers  of  cotton,  corn,  wheat,  and 
rice  who  cooperated  in  the  program.  They  were  not  made  to  tobacco  producers 
under  the  1939  and  1940  programs  because  tobacco  prices  exceeded  75  percent  of 
parity.  Appropriation  language  prohibited  parity  payments  in  this  situation. 

Although  marketing  quotas  were  proclaimed  for  cotton  and  rice,  and  for 
flue-cured,  burley,  and  dark  air-cured  tobacco  for  the  1939/40  marketing  year, 
only  cotton  quotas  became  effective.  More  than  a third  of  the  rice  and  tobacco 
producers  participating  in  the  referendums  voted  against  quotas. 

Without  marketing  quotas,  flue-cured  tobacco  growers  produced  a record- 
breaking  crop  and,  at  the  same  time,  the  growers  faced  a sharp  reduction  in 
foreign  markets  due  to  the  withdrawal  of  British  buyers  about  5 weeks  after  the 
markets  opened.  The  loss  of  outlets  caused  a shutdown  in  the  flue-cured 
tobacco  market.  During  the  crisis  period,  growers  approved  marketing  quotas 
for  their  1940/41  crop,  and  the  Commodity  Credit  Corporation,  through  a pur- 
chase and  loan  agreement,  restored  buying  power  to  the  market. 

In  addition  to  tobacco,  marketing  quotas  were  in  effect  for  the  1941  crops 
of  cotton,  wheat,  and  peanuts.  Marketing  quotas  for  peanuts  had  been  authori- 
zed by  legislation  approved  on  April  3,  1941. 

Acreage  allotments  for  corn  and  acreage  allotments  and  marketing  quotas  for 
cotton,  tobacco,  and  wheat  reduced  the  acreage  planted  during  the  years  they 
were  in  effect.  For  example,  the  acreage  of  wheat  seeded  dropped  from  a high 
of  almost  81  million  acres  in  1937  to  around  63  million  in  1938;  it  remained 
below  62  million  acres  until  1944.  Success  in  controlling  acreage,  which  was 
most  marked  in  the  case  of  cotton,  where  marketing  quotas  were  in  effect  every 
year  until  July  10,  1943,  and  where  longrun  adjustments  were  taking  place,  was 
not  accompanied  by  a comparable  decline  in  production.  Yield  per  harvested 
acre  began  an  upward  trend  for  all  four  crops.  The  trend  was  most  marked  for 
corn,  due  largely  to  the  use  of  hybrid  seed. 

High  farm  production  after  1937,  at  a time  when  nonfarm  income  remained 
below  1937  levels,  resulted  in  a decline  in  farm  prices  of  approximately 
20  percent  from  1938  through  1940.  The  nonrecourse  loans  and  payments  helped 
to  prevent  a more  drastic  decline  in  farm  income.  Direct  Government  payments 


-7- 


reached  their  highest  levels  in  1939  when  they  were  35  percent  of  net  cash 
income  received  from  sales  of  crops  and  livestock.  They  were  30  percent  in 
1940,  but  fell  to  13  percent  in  1941  when  farm  prices  and  incomes  began  their 
ascent  in  response  to  the  war  economy. 

In  the  meantime,  the  Department  had  been  developing  new  programs  to  dispose 
of  surplus  food  and  to  raise  the  nutritional  level  of  low- income  consumers. 

The  direct  distribution  program,  which  began  with  the  distribution  of  surplus 
pork  in  1933,  was  supplemented  by  a nationwide  school  lunch  program,  a low-cost 
milk  program,  and  a food  stamp  program.  The  number  of  schools  participating  in 
the  school  lunch  program  reached  66,783  during  1941.  The  food  stamp  program, 
which  reached  almost  4 million  people  in  1941,  was  discontinued  on  March  1, 

1943,  because  of  the  wartime  development  of  food  shortages  and  relatively  full 
employment . 


WART  If  IE  MEASURES 

The  large  stocks  of  wheat,  cotton,  and  corn  resulting  from  CCC  takeover  of 
defaulted  price  support  loans,  which  had  caused  criticism  of  the  Ever-Normal 
Granary,  became  a military  reserve  of  crucial  importance  after  the  United  States 
entered  World  War  II.  Concern  over  the  need  to  reduce  the  buildup  of  Government 
stocks — a task  complicated  by  legislative  barriers  such  as  the  minimum  national 
allotment  of  55  million  acres  for  wheat,  the  restrictions  on  sale  of  stocks  of 
the  Commodity  Credit  Corporation,  and  the  legislative  definition  of  farm  market- 
ing quotas  as  the  actual  production  or  normal  production  on  allotted  acreage — 
changed  during  the  war  and  post-war  period  to  concern  about  attainment  of 
production  to  meet  war  and  post-war  needs. 

On  December  26,  1940,  the  Department  asked  farmers  to  revise  plans  and  to 
have  at  least  as  many  sows  farrowing  in  1941  as  in  1940.  Following  the  passage 
of  the  Lend-Lease  Act  on  March  11,  1941,  Secretary  of  Agriculture  Claude  R. 
Wickard  announced,  on  April  3,  1941,  a price  support  program  for  hogs,  dairy 
products,  chickens,  and  eggs  at  a rate  above  market  prices.  Hogs  were  to  be 
supported  at  not  less  than  $9  per  hundredweight. 

On  April  3,  1941,  price  support  was  made  mandatory  on  peanuts  at  50  to 
75  percent  of  parity.  Marketing  quotas  were  to  be  proclaimed  when  supplies 
reached  certain  levels.  Approval  of  a quota  program  by  producer  referendum  was 
required. 

Congress  decided  that  legislation  was  needed  to  insure  that  farmers  shared 
in  the  profits  which  defense  contracts  were  bringing  to  the  American  economy 
and  as  an  incentive  to  wartime  production.  It  passed  legislation,  approved  on 
May  26,  1941,  to  raise  the  loan  rates  of  cotton,  corn,  wheat,  rice,  and 
tobacco,  for  which  producers  had  not  disapproved  marketing  quotas,  up  to  85  per- 
cent of  parity.  The  loan  rates  were  available  on  the  1941  crop. 

The  Act  was  amended  on  December  26,  1941,  to  add  peanuts  to  the  list  of 
commodities  and  to  extend  the  high  loan  rates  through  the  1946  crops. 


-8- 


Legislation  raising  the  loan  rates  for  basic  commodities  was  followed  by 
the  "Steagall  Amendment"  on  July  1,  1941.  This  Amendment  directed  the 
Secretary  to  support  at  not  less  than  85  percent  of  parity  the  prices  of  those 
nonbasic  commodities  for  which  he  found  it  necessary  to  ask  for  an  increase  in 
production. 

The  rate  of  support  was  raised  to  not  less  than  90  percent  of  parity  for 
corn,  cotton,  peanuts,  rice,  tobacco,  and  wheat,  and  for  the  Steagall  nonbasic 
commodities,  by  a law  approved  on  October  2,  1942.  However,  the  rate  of 
85  percent  of  parity  could  be  used  for  any  commodity  if  the  President  should 
determine  the  lower  rate  was  required  to  prevent  an  increase  in  the  cost  of 
feed  for  livestock  and  poultry  and  in  the  interest  of  national  defense.  This 
determination  was  made  for  wheat,  corn,  and  rice.  Since  the  price  of  rice  was 
above  the  price  support  level,  loans  were  not  made. 

The  legislation  of  October  2,  1942,  raised  the  price  support  level  to 
90  percent  of  parity  for  the  nonbasic  commodities  for  which  an  increase  in 
production  was  requested.  The  following  were  entitled  to  90  percent  of  parity 
by  the  Steagall  Amendment:  manufacturing  milk,  butterfat,  chickens,  eggs, 
turkeys,  hogs,  dry  peas,  dry  beans,  soybeans  for  oil,  flaxseed  for  oil,  peanuts 
for  oil,  American “Egyptian  cotton,  Irish  potatoes,  and  sweetpotatoes . 

The  price  support  rate  for  cotton  was  raised  to  92  1/2  percent  of  parity 
and  that  for  corn,  rice,  and  wheat  was  set  at  90  percent  of  parity  by  a law 
approved  on  June  30,  1944.  Since  the  price  of  rice  was  far  above  the  support 
level  for  rice,  loan  rates  were  not  announced.  The  Surplus  Property  Act  of 
October  3,  1944,  raised  the  price  support  rate  for  cotton  to  95  percent  of 
parity  with  respect  to  crops  harvested  after  December  31,  1943,  and  those 
planted  in  1944.  Cotton  was  purchased  by  the  Commodity  Credit  Corporation  at 
the  rate  of  100  percent  of  parity  during  1944  and  1945. 

In  addition  to  price  support  incentives  for  the  production  of  crops  needed 
for  lend-lease  and  for  military  use,  the  Department  gradually  relaxed  penalties 
for  exceeding  acreage  allotments,  provided  the  excess  acreage  was  planted  to 
war  crops.  In  some  areas  during  1943,  deductions  were  made  in  adjustment  pay- 
ments for  failure  to  plant  at  least  90  percent  of  special  war  crop  goals. 
Marketing  quotas  were  retained  throughout  the  war  period  on  burley  and  flue- 
cured  tobacco  to  encourage  production  of  crops  needed  for  the  war.  Marketing 
quotas  were  retained  on  wheat  until  February  1943.  With  the  discontinuance  of 
marketing  quotas,  farmers  in  spring  wheat  areas  were  urged  to  increase  wheat 
plantings  whenever  the  increase  would  not  interfere  with  more  vital  war  crops. 
Quotas  were  retained  on  cotton  until  July  10,  1943,  and  on  fire-cured  and  dark 
air-cured  tobacco  until  August  14,  1943.  Quotas  for  peanuts  were  suspended  for 
the  1943  crop,  and  none  were  proclaimed  until  1948.  With  controls  removed,  the 
adjustment  machinery  was  used  to  secure  increased  production  for  war  require- 
ments and  for  post-war  needs  of  people  abroad  who  had  suffered  war's  destruction. 

Legislation  approved  on  July  28,  1945,  required  that  the  support  rate  on 
fire-cured  tobacco  be  75  percent  of  the  rate  for  burley  and  the  support  rate 
for  dark  air-cured  and  Virginia  sun-cured  tobacco  be  66.4  percent  of  the 
burley  rate. 


-9- 


POST-WAR  PRICE  SUPPORTS 


An  Act  of  August  5,  1947,  required  support  of  wool  prices  until 
December  31,  1948,  at  the  1946  support  level. 

With  wartime  price  supports  scheduled  to  expire  on  December  31,  1948, 
price  support  levels  for  basic  commodities  would  drop  back  to  a range  of  52  to 
75  percent  of  parity  as  provided  in  the  Agricultural  Adjustment  Act  of  1938, 
with  only  discretionary  support  for  nonbasic  commodities.  Following  extensive 
hearings  that  began  in  1947  by  Committees  of  the  Congress,  both  in  Washington 
and  in  the  field  on  farm  policy  and  program  direction.  Congress  decided  that 
new  legislation  was  needed,  and  the  Agricultural  Act  of  1948,  which  also  con- 
tained amendments  to  the  Agricultural  Adjustment  Act  of  1938,  was  approved  on 
July  3,  1948. 

The  Act  provided  mandatory  price  support  at  90  percent  of  parity  for  the 
1949  crops  of  wheat,  corn,  rice,  peanuts  marketed  as  nuts,  cotton,  and 
tobacco  marketed  before  June  30,  1950,  if  producers  had  not  disapproved  mar- 
keting quotas.  Mandatory  price  support  at  90  percent  of  parity  or  comparable 
price  was  also  provided  for  Irish  potatoes  harvested  before  January  1,  1949, 
hogs,  chickens  over  3 1/2  pounds  live  weight,  eggs,  and  milk  and  its  products 
through  December  31,  1949. 

Price  support  was  provided  for  edible  dry  beans,  edible  dry  peas,  turkeys, 
soybeans  for  oil,  flaxseed  for  oil,  peanuts  for  oil,  American-Egyptian  cotton, 
and  sweetpotatoes  through  December  31,  1949,  at  not  less  than  60  percent  of 
parity  or  comparable  price  nor  higher  than  the  level  at  which  the  commodity  was 
supported  in  1948. 

The  Act  authorized  the  Secretary  of  Agriculture  to  require  compliance  with 
production  goals  and  marketing  regulations  as  a condition  of  eligibility  for 
price  support  to  producers  of  all  nonbasic  commodities  marketed  in  1949. 

Price  support  for  wool  marketed  before  June  30,  1950,  was  authorized  at 
the  1946  price  support  level,  an  average  price  to  farmers  of  42.3  cents  per 
pound.  Price  support  was  authorized  for  other  commodities  through  December  31, 
1949,  at  a fair  relationship  with  other  commodities  receiving  support,  if  funds 
were  available. 

The  parity  formula  was  revised  to  make  the  pattern  of  relationships  among 
parity  prices  dependent  upon  the  pattern  of  relationships  of  the  market  prices 
of  such  commodities  during  the  most  recent  moving  10-year  period.  This  revi- 
sion was  made  to  adjust  for  changes  in  productivity  and  other  factors  which  had 
occurred  since  the  base  period  1909-14. 

Title  II  of  the  Agricultural  Act  of  1948  would  have  provided  a sliding 
scale  of  price  support  for  the  basic  commodities  (with  the  exception  of 
tobacco)  when  quotas  were  in  force,  but  it  never  became  effective.  The  Act  of 
1948  was  superseded  by  the  Agricultural  Act  of  1949  on  October  31,  1949. 

The  1949  Act  set  support  prices  for  basic  commodities  at  90  percent  of 
parity  for  1950  and  between  80  percent  and  90  percent  for  1951  crops, 


-10- 


if  producers  had  not  disapproved  marketing  quotas  or  (except  for  tobacco)  if 
acreage  allotments  or  marketing  quotas  were  in  effect.  For  tobacco,  price 
support  was  to  continue  after  1950  at  90  percent  of  parity  if  marketing  quotas 
were  in  effect.  For  the  1952  and  succeeding  crops,  cooperating  producers  of 
basic  commodities — if  they  had  not  disapproved  marketing  quotas — were  to 
receive  support  prices  at  levels  varying  from  75  to  90  percent  of  parity, 
depending  upon  the  supply. 

Price  support  for  wool,  mohair,  tung  nuts,  honey,  and  Irish  potatoes  was 
mandatory  at  levels  ranging  from  60  to  90  percent  of  parity.  Whole  milk  and 
butterfat  and  their  products  were  to  be  supported  at  the  level  between  75  and 
90  percent  of  parity  which  would  assure  an  adequate  supply.  Price  support  was 
to  be  carried  out  by  loans  on,  or  purchases  of,  milk  and  the  products  of  milk. 
Wool  was  to  be  supported  at  such  a level,  between  60  and  90  percent  of  parity, 
as  was  necessary  to  encourage  an  annual  production  of  360  million  pounds  of 
shorn  wool. 

Price  support  was  authorized  for  any  other  nonbasic  commodity  at  any  level 
up  to  90  percent  of  parity,  depending  upon  the  availability  of  funds  and  other 
specified  factors,  such  as  perishability  of  the  commodity  and  ability  and 
willingness  of  producers  to  keep  supplies  in  line  with  demand. 

Prices  of  any  agricultural  commodity  could  be  supported  at  a level  higher 
than  90  percent  of  parity  if  the  Secretary  determined,  after  a public  hearing, 
that  the  higher  price  support  level  was  necessary  to  prevent  or  alleviate  a 
shortage  in  commodities  essential  to  national  welfare,  or  to  increase  or 
maintain  production  of  a commodity  in  the  interest  of  national  security. 

The  Act  amended  the  modernized  parity  formula  of  the  Agricultural  Act  of 
1948  to  add  wages  paid  hired  farm  labor  to  the  parity  index  and  to  include 
wartime  payments  made  to  producers  in  the  prices  of  commodities  and  in  the 
index  of  prices  received.  For  basic  commodities,  the  effective  parity  price 
through  1954  was  to  be  the  "old"  or  the  " modernized , " whichever  was  higher. 

For  many  nonbasic  commodities,  the  modernized  parity  price  became  effective  in 
1950.  However,  parity  prices  for  individual  commodities  under  the  modernized 
formula,  provided  in  the  Act  of  1948,  were  not  to  drop  more  than  5 percent  a 
year  from  what  they  would  have  been  under  the  old  formula. 

The  Act  provided  for  loans  to  cooperatives  for  the  construction  of  storage 
facilities  and  for  certain  changes  with  respect  to  acreage  allotment  and  mar- 
keting quota  provisions,  and  directed  that  Section  32  funds  be  used  principally 
for  perishable,  nonbasic  commodities.  The  Act  added  some  new  provisions  on  the 
sale  of  commodities  held  by  the  Commodity  Credit  Corporation.  Prices  were  to 
be  supported  by  loans,  purchases,  or  other  operations. 

Under  authority  of  the  Agricultural  Act  of  1949,  price  support  for  basic 
commodities  was  maintained  at  90  percent  of  parity  through  1950.  Supports  for 
nonbasic  commodities  were  generally  at  lower  levels  during  1949  and  1950  than 
in  1948  whenever  this  was  permitted  by  law.  Price  supports  for  hogs,  chickens, 
turkeys,  extra-long  staple  cotton,  dry  edible  peas,  and  sweetpotatoes  were 
discontinued  in  1950. 


-11- 


THE  KOREAN  WAR 


The  flexible  price  support  provisions  of  the  Agricultural  Act  of  1949  were 
used  for  only  one  basic  commodity  during  1951.  Secretary  Charles  F.  Brannan 
used  the  national  security  provision  of  the  Act  to  keep  price  support  levels  at 
90  percent  of  parity  for  all  of  the  basic  commodities  except  peanuts.  The 
price  support  rate  for  peanuts  was  raised  to  90  percent  for  1952.  The  outbreak 
of  the  Korean  War  on  June  25,  1950,  made  it  necessary  for  the  Department  to 
adjust  its  programs  to  secure  the  production  of  sufficient  food  and  fiber  to 
meet  any  eventuality.  Neither  acreage  allotments  nor  marketing  quotas  were  in 
effect  for  the  1951  and  1952  crops  of  wheat,  rice, corn,  or  cotton.  Allotments 
and  quotas  were  in  effect  for  peanuts  and  most  types  of  tobacco. 

Prices  of  oats,  barley,  rye,  and  grain  sorghums  were  supported  at  75  per- 
cent of  parity  in  1951  and  80  percent  in  1952.  Naval  stores,  soybeans,  cotton- 
seed, and  wool  were  supported  both  years  at  90  percent,  while  butterfat  was 
increased  to  90  percent  for  the  marketing  year  beginning  April  1,  1951.  Price 
support  for  potatoes  was  discontinued  in  1951  in  accordance  with  a law  of 
March  31,  1950,  which  prohibited  price  support  on  the  1951  and  subsequent  crops 
unless  marketing  quotas  were  in  effect.  Congress  never  authorized  the  use  of 
marketing  quotas  for  potatoes. 

The  Korean  War  strengthened  the  case  of  Congressional  leaders  who  did  not 
want  flexible  price  supports  to  become  effective  for  basic  commodities. 
Legislation  of  June  30,  1952,  to  amend  and  extend  the  Defense  Production  Act 
of  1950,  provided  that  price  support  loans  for  basic  crops  to  cooperators 
should  be  at  the  rate  of  90  percent  of  parity,  or  at  higher  levels,  through 
April  1953,  unless  producers  disapproved  marketing  quotas. 

The  period  for  mandatory  price  support  at  90  percent  of  parity  for  basic 
commodities  was  again  extended  by  legislation  approved  on  July  17,  1952. 

It  covered  the  1953  and  1954  crops  of  basic  commodities  if  the  producers  had 
not  disapproved  marketing  quotas.  This  legislation  also  extended  through  1955 
the  requirement  that  the  effective  parity  price  for  the  basic  commodities 
should  be  the  parity  price  computed  under  the  new  or  the  old  formula,  whichever 
was  higher.  Extra-long  staple  cotton  was  made  a basic  commodity  for  price 
support  purposes. 

On  March  28,  1952,  Congress  repealed  the  authorization  to  market  peanuts 
for  oil  in  excess  of  marketing  quotas  without  paying  a penalty. 


LEVELS  OF  PRICE  SUPPORT— FIXED 
OR  FLEXIBLE? 

The  end  of  the  Korean  War  in  1953  necessitated  changes  in  price  support, 
production  control,  and  related  programs.  For  the  next  8 years,  controversy 
over  levels  of  support — high,  fixed  levels  versus  a flexible  scale — dominated 
the  scene. 

Secretary  of  Agriculture  Ezra  Taft  Benson  proclaimed  marketing  quotas  for 
the  1954  crops  of  wheat  and  cotton  on  June  1,  1953,  and  October  9,  1953, 


-12- 


respectively.  The  major  types  of  tobacco  and  peanuts  continued  under  marketing 
quotas.  However,  quotas  were  not  imposed  on  corn.  The  Secretary  announced  on 
February  27,  1953,  that  dairy  prices  would  be  supported  at  90  percent  of  parity 
for  another  year  beginning  April  1,  1953.  Supports  were  continued  at  90  per- 
cent of  parity  for  basic  crops  during  1953  and  1954,  in  accordance  with  the 
legislation  of  July  17,  1952. 

The  Agricultural  Trade  Development  and  Assistance  Act,  better  known  as 
Public  Law  480,  was  approved  July  10,  1954.  This  Act,  which  served  as  the 
basic  authority  for  sale  of  surplus  agricultural  commodities  for  foreign 
currency,  to  make  shipments  for  emergency  relief,  and  to  barter  farm  products 
for  strategic  material,  proved  to  be  of  major  importance  in  disposing  of  farm 
products  abroad. 

The  Agricultural  Act  of  1954,  approved  August  28,  1954,  established  price 
supports  for  the  basic  commodities  on  a flexible  basis,  ranging  from  82.5  per- 
cent of  parity  to  90  percent  for  1955  and  from  75  percent  to  90  percent 
thereafter;  an  exception  was  tobacco,  which  was  to  be  at  90  percent  of  parity 
when  marketing  quotas  were  in  effect.  The  transition  to  flexible  support  was 
to  be  eased  by  "set  asides"  of  basic  commodities.  Not  more  than  specified 
maximum  nor  less  than  specified  minimum  quantities  of  these  commodities  were  to 
be  excluded  from  the  "carryover"  for  the  purpose  of  computing  the  level  of 
support.  Special  provisions  were  added  for  various  commodities.  One  of  the 
most  interesting,  under  the  National  Wool  Act,  required  that  the  price  of  wool 
be  supported  at  a level  between  60  and  110  percent  of  parity,  with  incentive 
payments  to  producers  authorized  as  a method  of  support.  This  method  of 
support  is  still  in  effect. 


THE  SOIL  BANK 

The  Soil  Bank,  established  by  the  Agricultural  Act  of  1956,  was  a large- 
scale  effort,  similar  in  some  respects  to  programs  of  the  1930 's,  to  bring 
about  adjustments  between  supply  and  demand  for  agricultural  products  by  taking 
farmland  out  of  production.  The  program  was  divided  into  two  parts — an  acreage 
reserve  and  a conservation  reserve.  The  specific  objective  of  the  acreage 
reserve  was  to  reduce  the  amount  of  land  planted  to  allotment  crops — wheat, 
cotton,  corn,  tobacco,  peanuts,  and  rice.  Under  its  terms,  farmers  cut  land 
planted  to  these  crops  below  established  allotments,  or,  in  the  case  of  corn, 
their  base  acreage,  and  received  payments  for  the  diversion  of  such  acreage 
to  conserving  uses.  In  1957,  21.4  million  acres  were  in  the  acreage  reserve. 

The  last  year  of  the  program  was  1958. 

All  farmers  were  eligible  to  participate  in  the  conservation  reserve  by 
designating  certain  cropland  for  the  reserve  and  putting  it  to  conservation  use. 
A major  objection  to  this  plan  in  some  areas  was  that  communities  were  dis- 
rupted when  many  farmers  placed  their  entire  farms  in  the  conservation  reserve. 
On  July  15,  1960,  28.6  million  acres  were  under  contracts  for  a maximum  of 
10  years. 

The  Agricultural  Act  of  August  28,  1958,  made  innovations  in  the  cotton 
and  corn  support  programs.  It  also  provided  for  continuation  of  supports 


-13- 


for  rice,  without  requiring  the  exact  level  of  support  to  be  based  on  supply. 
Price  support  for  most  feed  grains  became  mandatory. 

For  1959  and  1960,  each  cotton  farmer  was  to  choose  between  (a)  a regular 
acreage  allotment  and  price  support,  or  (b)  an  increase  of  up  to  40  percent  in 
allotment  with  price  support  15  points  lower  than  the  percentage  of  parity  set 
under  (a).  After  1960,  cotton  was  to  be  under  regular  allotments,  supported 
between  70  and  90  percent  of  parity  in  1961  and  between  65  and  90  percent  after 
1961. 


Corn  farmers,  in  a referendum  to  be  held  not  later  than  December  15,  1958, 
were  given  the  option  of  voting  either  to  discontinue  acreage  allotments  for 
the  1959  and  subsequent  crops  and  to  receive  supports  at  90  percent  of  the 
average  farm  price  for  the  preceding  3 years  but  not  less  than  65  percent  of 
parity,  or  to  keep  acreage  allotments  with  supports  between  75  and  90  percent 
of  parity.  The  first  proposal  was  adopted  for  an  indefinite  period  in  a 
referendum  held  November  25,  1958. 


FARM  PROGRAMS  IN  THE  1960 'S 

President  John  F.  Kennedy's  first  executive  order,  after  his  inauguration 
on  January  20,  1961,  directed  Secretary  of  Agriculture  Orville  L.  Freeman  to 
expand  the  program  of  food  distribution  to  needy  persons.  This  was  done 
immediately.  A pilot  food  stamp  plan  was  also  started.  In  addition,  steps 
were  taken  to  expand  the  school  lunch  program  and  to  make  better  use  abroad  of 
American  agricultural  abundance. 

In  another  race  "against  the  sun"  to  have  a program  in  effect  before  plant- 
ing time,  the  new  Administration's  first  law  dealing  with  agriculture,  the  Feed 
Grain  Act,  was  approved  March  22,  1961.  It  provided  that  the  1961  crop  of  corn 
should  be  supported  at  not  less  than  65  percent  of  parity  (the  actual  rate  was 
74  percent),  and  established  a special  program  for  diverting  corn  and  grain 
sorghum  acreage  to  soil-conserving  crops  or  practices.  Producers  were  eligible 
for  price  support  only  after  retiring  at  least  20  percent  of  the  average 
acreage  devoted  to  the  two  crops  in  1959  and  1960. 

The  Agricultural  Act  of  1961  was  approved  August  8,  1961.  Specific  pro- 
grams were  established  for  the  1962  crops  of  wheat  and  feed  grains,  aimed  at 
diverting  acreage  from  these  crops.  The  Act  authorized  marketing  orders  for 
peanuts,  turkeys,  cherries,  and  cranberries  for  canning  or  freezing,  and  apples 
produced  in  specified  States.  The  National  Wool  Act  of  1954  was  extended  for 
4 years,  and  Public  Law  480  was  extended  through  December  31,  1964. 

The  Food  and  Agriculture  Act  of  1962,  signed  September  27,  1962,  continued 
the  feed  grain  program  for  1963.  It  provided  that  price  supports  would  be  set 
by  the  Secretary  between  65  and  90  percent  of  parity  for  corn  and  related  prices 
for  other  feeds.  Producers  were  required  to  participate  in  the  acreage  diver- 
sion as  a condition  of  eligibility  for  price  support. 

The  Act  of  1962  provided  supports  for  the  1963  wheat  crop  at  $1.82  a 
bushel  (83  percent  of  parity)  for  farmers  complying  with  existing  wheat 


-14- 


acreage  allotments,  and  offered  additional  payments  to  farmers  retiring  land 
from  wheat  production. 

Under  the  new  law  beginning  in  1964,  the  55-million-acre  minimum  national 
allotment  of  wheat  acreage  was  permanently  abolished,  and  the  Secretary  could 
set  allotments  as  low  as  necessary  to  limit  production  to  the  amount  needed. 
Farmers  were  to  decide  between  two  systems  of  price  supports.  The  first  system 
provided  for  the  payment  of  penalties  by  farmers  overplanting  acreage  allot- 
ments and  provided  for  issuance  of  marketing  certificates  based  on  the  quantity 
of  wheat  estimated  to  be  used  for  domestic  human  consumption  and  a portion  of 
the  number  of  bushels  estimated  for  export.  The  amount  of  wheat  on  which 
farmers  received  certificates  would  be  supported  between  65  and  90  percent  of 
parity;  the  remaining  production  would  be  set  at  a figure  based  upon  its  value 
as  feed.  The  15-acre  exemption  was  also  to  be  cut.  The  second  system  imposed 
no  penalties  for  overplanting,  but  provided  that  wheat  grown  by  planters  com- 
plying with  allotments  would  be  supported  at  only  50  percent  of  parity. 

The  first  alternatives  was  defeated  in  a referendum  held  on  May  21,  1963, 
but  a law  passed  early  in  1964  kept  the  second  alternative  from  becoming 
effective. 

On  May  20,  1963,  another  feed  grain  bill  permitted  continuation  in  1964-65, 
with  modifications,  of  previous  legislation.  It  provided  supports  for  corn  for 
both  years  at  65  to  90  percent  of  parity,  and  authorized  the  Secretary  to 
require  additional  acreage  diversion. 

The  most  important  farm  legislation  in  1964  was  the  Cotton-Wheat  Act, 
approved  April  11,  1964.  The  Secretary  of  Agriculture  was  authorized  to  make 
subsidy  payments  to  domestic  handlers  or  textile  mills  in  order  to  bring  the 
price  of  cotton  consumed  in  the  United  States  down  to  the  export  price.  Each 
cotton  farm  was  to  have  a regular  and  a domestic  cotton  allotment  for  1964  and 
1965.  A farmer  complying  with  his  regular  allotment  was  to  have  his  crop 
supported  at  30  cents  a pound  (about  73.6  percent  of  parity).  A farmer  plant- 
ing only  his  domestic  allotment  would  receive  a support  price  up  to  15  percent 
higher  (the  actual  figure  in  1964  was  33.5  cents  a pound). 

The  Cotton-Wheat  Act  of  1964  set  up  a voluntary  wheat-marketing  certificate 
program  for  1964  and  1965,  under  which  farmers  who  complied  with  acreage  allot- 
ments and  agreed  to  participate  in  a land-diversion  program  would  receive  price 
supports,  marketing  certificates,  and  land-diversion  payments,  while  noncom- 
pliers  would  receive  no  benefits.  Wheat  food  processors  and  exporters  were 
required  to  make  prior  purchases  of  certificates  to  cover  all  the  wheat  they 
handled.  Price  supports,  including  loans  and  certificates,  for  the  producer's 
share  of  wheat  estimated  for  domestic  consumption  (in  1964,  45  percent  of  a 
complying  farmer's  normal  production)  would  be  set  from  65  to  90  percent  of 
parity.  The  actual  figure  in  1964  was  $2  a bushel,  about  79  percent  of  parity. 
Price  supports,  including  loans  and  certificates,  on  the  production  equivalent 
to  a portion  of  estimated  exports  (in  1964,  also  45  percent  of  the  normal  pro- 
duction of  the  farmer's  allotment)  would  be  from  0 to  90  percent  of  parity. 

The  export  support  price  in  1964  was  $1.55  a bushel,  about  61  percent  of 
parity.  The  remaining  wheat  could  be  supported  from  0 to  90  percent  of  parity; 
in  1964  the  support  price  was  at  $1.30,  about  52  percent  of  parity.  Generally, 


-15- 


price  supports  through  loans  and  purchases  on  wheat  were  at  $1.30  per  bushel 
in  1964,  around  the  world  market  price,  while  farmers  participating  in  the 
program  received  negotiable  certificates  which  the  Commodity  Credit  Corporation 
agreed  to  purchase  at  face  value  to  make  up  the  differences  in  price  for  their 
share  of  domestic  consumption  and  export  wheat.  The  average  national  support 
through  loans  and  purchases  on  wheat  in  1965  was  $1.25  per  bushel. 

The  carryover  of  all  wheat  on  July  1,  1965,  totaled  819  million  bushels, 
compared  with  901  million  bushels  in  1964  and  1.3  billion  bushels  in  1960. 

A dairy  indemnity  program  was  authorized  also  in  1964.  Under  this  program, 
the  Department  makes  payments  to  dairy  farmers  who  were  directed  to  remove  their 
milk  from  commercial  markets  because  it  contained  residues  of  chemicals 
registered  and  approved  by  the  Federal  Government. 

An  Act  of  April  16,  1965,  provided  for  acreage-poundage  farm  marketing 
quotas  on  flue-cured  tobacco.  When  such  quotas  are  in  effect,  price  support 
is  to  be  available  on,  not  to  exceed,  110  percent  of  the  quota  for  the  farm. 

In  the  case  of  burley  tobacco  price  support  is  to  be  available  on,  not  to 
exceed,  120  percent  of  the  quota  for  the  farm. 

Marketing  quotas  have  been  in  effect  for  most  types  of  tobacco  since 

1965. 


THE  FOOD  AND  AGRICULTURE 
ACT  OF  1965 

Programs  established  by  the  Food  and  Agriculture  Act  of  1965,  approved 
November  3,  1965,  were  to  be  in  effect  from  1966  through  1969,  but  were 
extended  through  1970. 

Milk  was  one  of  the  commodities  covered.  After  producers  in  a milk  mar- 
keting area  had  approved  an  overall  plan  authorized  by  this  legislation,  each 
dairy  producer  in  a milk  marketing  area  received  a fluid  milk  base,  thus  per- 
mitting him  to  cut  his  surplus  production.  The  Wool  Act  of  1954,  as  amended, 
and  the  voluntary  feed  grain  program  begun  in  1961  were  extended. 

Based  upon  the  concept  of  a "one  price"  system,  the  market  price  of 
cotton  was  supported  at  90  percent  of  estimated  world  price  levels,  thus  making 
payments  to  mills  and  export  subsidies  unnecessary.  Incomes  of  cotton  farmers 
were  maintained  through  payments  based  on  the  extent  of  their  participation  in 
the  allotment  program,  with  special  provisions  for  protecting  the  income  of 
farmers  with  small  cotton  acreages.  Participation  was  voluntary  (although 
price  support  eligibility  generally  depended  on  participation)  with  a minimum 
acreage  reduction  of  12.5  percent  from  effective  farm  allotments  required  for 
participation  on  all  but  small  farms. 

The  voluntary  wheat  certificate  program  begun  in  1964  was  extended  with 
only  limited  changes.  The  rice  program  was  continued,  but  an  acreage  diversion 
program  similar  to  wheat  was  to  be  effective  whenever  the  national  acreage 
allotment  for  rice  was  reduced  below  the  1965  figure. 


-16- 


The  Act  established  a Cropland  Adjustment  Program.  The  Secretary  was 
authorized  to  enter  into  5-  to  10-year  contracts  with  farmers  calling  for 
conversion  of  cropland  into  practices  or  uses  which  would  conserve  water, 
soil,  wildlife,  or  forest  resources,  or  establish  or  protect  or  conserve  open 
spaces,  national  beauty,  wildlife  or  recreational  resources,  or  prevent  air  or 
water  pollution.  Payments  were  to  be  not  more  than  40  percent  of  the  value  of 
the  crop  that  would  have  been  produced  on  the  land.  Contracts  entered  into  in 
each  of  the  next  4 fiscal  years  could  not  obligate  more  than  $225  million  per 
calendar  year . The  Greenspan  Program  of  the  Department  was  carried  out  as  a 
part  of  the  Cropland  Adjustment  Program. 

Legislation  approved  August  11,  1968, provided  lower  price  support  loans 
for  extra-long  staple  cotton,  supplemented  by  price  support  payments.  The 
objective  was  to  bring  the  price  of  this  type  of  cotton  in  line  with  the  price 
of  upland  cotton  so  that  it  could  be  sold  on  the  market  rather  than  sold  to, 
and  held  by,  the  Commodity  Credit  Corporation. 


THE  AGRICULTURAL  ACT  OF  1970 

With  the  change  in  administration  in  1969,  both  the  Department  and  the 
Congressional  Committees  undertook  legislative  reviews  to  develop  a program 
to  replace  the  1965  Food  and  Agriculture  Act  due  to  expire  at  the  end  of  1970. 
Secretary  Hardin  and  members  of  his  staff  met  in  evening  discussion  groups  with 
Chairman  Poage  and  other  members  and  staff  of  the  House  Agriculture  Committee. 

The  Agricultural  Act  of  1970,  approved  November  30,  1970,  reflected  a 
number  of  compromises  between  the  position  of  the  Administration  and  that  of 
the  Senate  Committee.  It  was,  however,  opposed  by  all  major  farm  organizations 
for  widely  differing  reasons.  The  new  Act,  a 3-year  program,  discontinued  the 
use  of  acreage  allotments  and  marketing  quotas  for  wheat,  upland  cotton,  and 
feed  grains.  To  qualify  for  price  support,  the  farmer  was  required  to  keep  a 
specific  percentage  of  his  cropland  out  of  production,  with  this  acreage  set 
aside  to  be  put  to  conserving  practices.  He  could  then  grow  whatever  he 
wished  on  his  remaining  land,  except  for  the  crops  that  remained  under 
controls — the  so-called  quota  crops — because  of  earlier  legislation  not 
affected  by  the  new  Act.  These  crops  included  rice,  sugar,  peanuts,  tobacco, 
and  extra-long  staple  cotton.  Payment  units  were  established  at  an  annual 
ceiling  of  $55,000  per  crop,  excluding  commodity  loans  and  purchases,  for  pro- 
ducers of  upland  cotton,  wheat,  and  feed  grains. 

Wheat  loans  were  available  to  participants  at  not  less  than  $1.25  per 
bushel  for  1971  through  1973  and  could  range  up  to  100  percent  of  parity, 
which  was  $2.85  in  1970.  In  addition,  farmers  who  set  aside  land  for  conserva- 
tion use  equal  to  a specified  percentage  of  the  domestic  wheat  allotment,  in 
addition  to  an  acreage  equal  to  the  farm  conserving  base,  would  become 
eligible  for  their  share  of  domestic  marketing  certificates  covering  a total  of 
not  less  than  535  million  bushels  of  wheat  each  year.  The  value  of  the 
certificates  would  be  the  difference  between  the  wheat  parity  price  and  the 
average  price  received  by  farmers  during  the  first  5 months  of  the  marketing 
year . 


-17- 


Cotton  planters  were  also  required  to  set  aside  an  amount,  not  to  exceed 
28  percent  of  the  cotton  allotment,  to  qualify  for  the  price  support  program. 

The  payment  was  to  be  equal  to  the  difference  between  65  percent  of  parity  or 
35  cents  per  pound,  whichever  was  higher,  and  the  average  market  price  for  the 
first  5 months  of  the  marketing  year,  but  not  to  fall  lower  than  15  cents  per 
pound.  Payments  per  pound  for  small  farms  were  30  percent  higher  than  for 
other  farms.  Loans  were  to  be  available  at  90  percent  of  the  average  world 
price  for  the  2 previous  years. 

For  producers  in  the  wheat,  feed  grain,  and  upland  cotton  programs,  the 
commodity  or  an  eligible  substitute  crop  had  to  be  planted,  or  there  would  be 
a 20  percent  reduction  in  allotment  the  following  year.  Failure  to  plant  the 
allotment  or  substitute  crop  for  3 years  would  result  in  loss  of  the  allotment, 
allotment . 

Authority  for  the  price  plan  (Class  I base  plans)  in  Federal  milk  market 
order  areas  was  amended  and  extended  for  3 years,  except  that  authority  would 
continue  in  effect  until  December  31,  1976,  with  respect  to  any  Class  I base 
plan  in  effect  on  December  31,  1973.  Milk  was  to  continue  to  be  supported  at 
a level  between  75  and  90  percent  of  parity,  but  price  support  for  butterfat 
was  discontinued.  However,  CCC  would  continue  to  buy  butter  under  the  support 
program,  and  the  Secretary  could  use  his  discretion  in  setting  the  buying  price 
for  butter  at  any  level  which,  in  combination  with  purchases  of  milk  and  other 
milk  products,  would  accomplish  the  announced  support  price  for  milk.  Dairy 
indemnity  payments  were  continued,  with  payments  also  authorized  to  manufactur- 
ers of  dairy  products.  The  Secretary’s  authority  was  extended  for  donation  of 

dairy  products  held  by  the  Commodity  Credit  Corporation  to  military  agencies. 

v 

The  1970  Act  also  authorized  payments  to  beekeepers  who,  through  no  fault 
of  their  own,  had  suffered  losses  of  honey  bees  as  a result  of  utilization  of 
pesticides  near  or  adjacent  to  the  property  on  which  the  beehives  were  located. 

The  Act  extended  authority  for  payments  on  wool  and  mohair  through 
December  31,  1973,  and  established  support  prices  of  72  cents  per  pound  for 
shorn  wool  and  80.2  cents  per  pound  for  mohair  for  each  year  of  the  extension. 

The  feed  grain  program  covered  corn,  grain  sorghum,  and  barley  if  it  was 
designated.  Price  supports  on  corn  were  to  be  the  higher  of  $1.35  per  bushel  or 
70  percent  of  the  parity  price  for  corn  on  October  1,  and  the  loan  not  less 
than  $1.00  nor  more  than  90  percent  of  parity  as  determined  by  the  Secretary. 

A producer  would  receive  a payment  equal  to  the  difference  between  the  support 
price  and  market  price  on  half  his  base  production.  Producers,  in  order  to  be 
eligible  for  payments,  loans,  and  purchases,  were  to  set  aside  for  approved 
conservation  uses  specified  acreages  of  cropland  if  a set-aside  program  was 
in  effect. 

The  Act  extended  provisions  of  Public  Law  480,  the  "Food  for  Peace" 
program,  through  calendar  year  1973. 

Authorization  was  continued  for  the  Cropland  Conversion  and  Greenspan  long- 
term land  retirement  programs  at  an  authorized  appropriation  level  of  $10  mil- 
lion annually  for  each  program.  The  "Greenspan"  type  of  program  was  authorized 


-18- 


to  assist  public  entities  in  acquiring  cropland  for  permanent  retirement  to 
noncrop  uses  including  preservation  of  open  spaces,  wildlife  or  recreational 
facilities,  and  pollution  prevention. 

Congress  declared  as  public  policy  achievement  of  a sound  rural-urban 
balance  and  provided  for  reports  on  various  types  of  technical  and  financial 
assistance.  New  offices  and  Government  facilities  were  to  be  located,  insofar 
as  practicable,  in  communities  of  lower  population  density. 

Legislation  approved  April  14,  1971,  provided  for  poundage  quotas  for 
burley  tobacco  in  lieu  of  farm  'acreage  allotments.  Producers  voting  in  a 
referendum  approved  the  poundage  program  for  the  1974-76  crop  years  by 
98.3  percent  of  those  voting. 


THE  AGRICULTURE  AND  CONSUMER  PROTECTION 
ACT  OF  1973 

By  1973  the  demand  for  American  farm  products  was  at  a high  level  due  to 
world  crop  shortages  and  world-wide  inflation.  World  demand  combined  with 
export  subsidies  and  the  devaluation  of  the  dollar  had  liquidated  the  stocks 
which  had  been  built  up  under  previous  price  support  programs. 

The  Agriculture  and  Consumer  Protection  Act  of  1973  placed  its  emphasis  on 
production  to  respond  to  "ever-growing  world-wide  demand  for  food  and  fiber." 
Secretary  Butz  proclaimed  that  the  legislation  represented  "an  historic  turning 
point  in  the  philosophy  of  farm  programs  in  the  United  States."  The  fundamental 
difference  was  its  emphasis  on  maintaining  or  increasing  production  in  con- 
trast to  earlier  programs  to  curtail  production  of  wheat,  corn,  upland  cotton, 
and  tobacco. 

A new  concept  of  target  prices  was  introduced  which  was  only  to  be  used 
when  market  prices  fell  below  the  target  levels.  Payment  rates  would  be  equal 
to  the  amount  by  which  market  prices  fell  below  target  prices.  However,  pay- 
ment rates  could  not  exceed  the  difference  between  target  prices  and  price 
support  loans.  Payments  were  not  to  be  made  as  they  had  in  earlier  programs 
when  market  prices  were  high.  Target  prices  for  1974  and  1975  were  set  at 
38  cents  per  pound  for  upland  cotton,  $2.05  per  bushel  for  wheat,  and  $1.38  per 
bushel  for  corn  with  reasonable  rates  to  be  set  for  grain  sorghum  (and  barley 
if  designated)  in  relation  to  the  rate  for  corn.  In  the  setting  of  target 
prices,  the  parity  formula  was  not  used  as  it  had  been  in  previous  programs. 

Target  prices  for  the  1976  and  1977  crop  years  would  be  the  1975  target 
prices  adjusted  by  an  index  of  production  costs  (production  items,  such  as 
fertilizer  and  gasoline,  interest,  taxes,  and  farm  wage  rates)  published  by 
the  Department  and  changes  in  productivity.  Productivity  was  to  be  measured  by 
comparing  the  most  recent  national  3-year  average  for  each  crop  with  the 
3-year  average  ending  with  the  preceding  year. 

In  addition  to  authorization  for  payments  to  producers  when  prices  did  not 
reach  target  levels  the  Act  provided  for  loans  to  producers  at  levels  below 
market  prices  to  put  greater  reliance  on  the  market  places.  For  loan  rates 


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the  parity  concept  as  well  as  a price  level  per  bushel  was  used  to  set  the 
limit  on  the  Secretary's  discretion.  In  the  case  of  wheat  the  loan  level  was 
to  be  not  less  than  $1.37  per  bushel  and  not  more  than  100  percent  of  parity 
as  determined  by  the  Secretary  to  be  appropriate,  taking  a number  of  factors 
into  consideration.  For  corn  the  loan  was  to  be  at  a level  not  less  than 
$1.10  per  bushel  nor  more  than  90  percent  of  parity,  as  the  Secretary 
determined  would  encourage  the  export  of  feed  grain  and  not  result  in  excessive 
grain  stocks  in  the  United  States.  The  loan  rates  for  other  feed  grain  were 
to  be  established  in  relation  to  corn.  The  Secretary  suspended  the  farm  con- 
serving base  requirement,  and  designated  barley  a feed  grain  for  program  pur- 
poses, for  the  duration  of  the  Act. 

The  parity  concept  was  not  used  in  the  setting  of  loan  rate  levels  for 
upland  cotton,  which  were  to  be  established  to  reflect  90  percent  of  the 
average  price  of  American  cotton  in  world  markets  for  the  preceding  3-year 
period.  The  total  amount  of  payments  to  any  persdn  under  the  wheat,  feed 
grain,  and  upland  cotton  programs  was  limited  to  $20,000.  This  did  not  include 
loans  or  purchases. 

"Disaster"  payments  were  authorized  if  eligible  producers  were  prevented 
from  planting  any  portion  of  allotments  because  of  drought,  flood,  or  natural 
disaster,  or  other  conditions  beyond  their  control.  These  payments  were  to 
be  available  when  natural  disaster  prevented  a farmer  from  harvesting  two-thirds 
of  his  normal  production  of  the  allotment  crop. 

Provision  was  also  made  to  establish  a disaster  reserve  of  inventories  not 
to  exceed  75  million  bushels  of  wheat,  feed  grains,  and  soybeans  to  alleviate 
distress  caused  by  natural  disaster. 

The  support  price  for  milk  was  to  be  at  a level  between  75  and  90  percent 
of  parity  (except  for  the  period  ending  March  31,  1975,  during  which  the 
minimum  level  was  to  be  at  80  percent)  to  be  determined  by  the  Secretary  as 
necessary  to  assure  an  adequate  supply  of  pure  and  wholesome  milk  to  meet 
current  need,  reflect  changes  in  the  cost  of  production,  and  to  assure  a level 
of  farm  income  adequate  to  maintain  productive  capacity.  Price  support  would 
be  provided  through  purchases  of  milk  and  the  products  of  milk.  Support  has 
been  carried  out  through  purchases  of  butter,  nonfat  dry  milk,  and  cheese. 

The  Act  continued  the  price  for  shorn  wool  at  72  cents  per  pound  and  for 
mohair  at  80.2  cents  per  pound  through  the  marketing  year  ending  December  31, 
1977. 


The  Secretary  was  directed  to  determine  and  apportion  national  acreage 
allotments  for  wheat,  feed  grains,  and  upland  cotton.  Authority  for  set- 
asides  of  cropland  was  provided  as  a condition  of  eligibility  for  loans, 
purchases,  and  payments  for  wheat,  feed  grains,  and  upland  cotton  as  specified 
percentages  of  crop  allotments  to  be  devoted  to  approved  conservation  uses,  if 
a set-aside  program  were  announced.  Cost  sharing  for  conservation  usage  was 
authorized . 

Although  CCC  held  virtually  no  inventories.  Public  Law  480  was  extended 
for  an  additional  4 years.  Long-term  contracts  for  up  to  25  years  were 


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authorized  for  the  Rural  Environmental  Conservation  Program  and  the  Waterbank 
Program.  The  dairy  and  beekeeper  indemnity  programs  were  continued. 

Due  to  the  greatly  increased  foreign  demand  over  the  past  few  years,  the 
Agriculture  and  Consumer  Protection  Act  has  brought  about  a change  in  emphasis. 
However,  much  of  the  authority  of  the  Agricultural  Adjustment  Act  of  1938,  as 
amended,  to  limit  total  acreage  planted  to  major  crops  (based  on  producer 
referendum  for  establishing  quotas)  and  to  support  prices,  is  still  available 
as  standby  authority.  The  authority  would  be  applicable,  as  amended  for 
specific  commodities,  if  the  1973  Act  were  to  expire,  if  the  current  high 
foreign  demand  for  agricultural  commodities  should  not  continue,  or  if  another 
technological  explosion  were  to  occur. 

Support  levels,  relative  to  parity,  would  reflect  provisions  of  the  1949 
Act,  as  amended  specifically  for  the  various  commodities.  However,  because  of 
major  foreign  sales  in  1972,  and  continuing  demand,  earlier  surpluses  have 
virtually  disappeared  and  prices  through  1975  remained  above  target  levels. 

On  August  21,  1975,  the  Secretary  of  Agriculture  announced  there  would  be  no 
acreage  set  aside  from  production  for  the  1976  feed  grain,  wheat,  and  upland 
cotton  programs.  The  continuation  of  no  set-aside  requirements  in  future 
years  will  be  contingent  on  a high  level  of  foreign  demand. 

For  over  40  years,  price  support  and  adjustment  programs  have  had  an 
important  impact  upon  the  farm  and  national  economy.  Consumers  have  consist- 
ently had  a reliable  supply  of  farm  products  for  a smaller  proportion  of  their 
income  than  anywhere  else  in  the  world.  Farmers  have  been  assured  of  at  least 
specified  minimum  prices  for  their  products.  The  legislation  and  resulting 
programs  have  been  modified  to  meet  varying  conditions  of  depression,  war, 
and  prosperity,  and  have  sought  to  give  farmers,  in  general,  the  opportunity 
to  attain  economic  equality  with  other  segments  of  the  economy. 


UNITED  STATES  DEPARTMENT  OF  AGRICULTURE 
WASHINGTON,  D.C.  20250 

OFFICIAL  BUSINESS 

PENALTY  FOR  PRIVATE  USE,  J300 


POSTAGE  AND  FEES  PAID 
U.S.  DEPARTMENT  OF 
AGRICULTURE 
AGR  101 


FIRST  CLASS